Hispanic Media: Faring Better than the Mainstream Media
Spanish-language media faces challenges — such as an increasingly U.S.-born Latino population — but it still tends to fare better overall than their mainstream English-language counterparts.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Spanish-language media faces challenges — such as an increasingly U.S.-born Latino population — but it still tends to fare better overall than their mainstream English-language counterparts.
More than a third of adults own a smartphone.
A 16-point Twitter-adoption gap separates black online adults and white online adults.
Three in four Americans say they display Old Glory at home, work or elsewhere.
By a 48%-to-38% margin, more Americans say states’ rights rather than slavery was the main cause of the Civil War.
Just one-in-ten Americans have a positive reaction when they see the Confederate flag displayed.
Among adults who go online, 8% use Twitter.
A majority of Americans say union agreements don’t give union workers unfair advantages, but rather ensure fair treatment for workers.
Seven-in-ten say the trend toward more single women having children is bad for society, and 61% say that a child needs both a mother and father to grow up happily.
Throughout human history, poets, balladeers and songwriters have celebrated the idea that there’s just one true love for every living soul. Only 28% of today’s Americans agree.
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